Stream Table 2011

This course was last taught Winter 2011. That semester, research was conducted using a small (~0.5 X 1.5 m) commercial table with limited capabilities. The goal was the same, to create a sustainable migrating meander and was accomplished on a limited basis (i.e. a single migrating meander bend near the head of the table). Toward the end of the semester, the 2011 group developed ideas for what they called the "Dream Table." In conjunction with the Department of Mechanical Engineering at BYU-Idaho, a preliminary version was constructed and used for the first time this semester (Winter 2013). To see work done by the 2011 group, click here.

Feedback and Collaboration

We welcome feedback and collaboration with others working on or interested in this topic.

Monday, November 18, 2013

BYUI Undergraduate Research Conference Abstract: BYU-Idaho Department of Geology Stream Table Modifications

Abstract submitted for poster presentation at the BYU-Idaho Student Research Conference

BYU-Idaho Department of Geology Stream Table Modifications

Joseph McCullough, Tim Melton, and William W. Little (mentor)

The BYU-Idaho Department of geology through its course in geomorphology is involved in research utilizing a stream table to model natural fluvial and marine processes. To date, a small (~0.5 x 1.5 m) commercial table that consists of a box for sediment, a water pump for stream discharge, and an adjustable pipe to control base level has been used. This was found to be inadequate for continued research. Other commercial tables also lack desired features, such as a sediment feed mechanism, variable discharge, and basin subsidence capability. Therefore, a larger table (~1.2 x 2.4 m) was designed by the Department of Geology and constructed as a senior project through the Department of Mechanical Engineering. Use of the new table has indicated a need for further adjustment to some components. Encountered problems include: a leaky hinge associated with the stream gradient adjustor,  wicking of moisture into the sediment feed; stalling of the sediment feed at very low turn rates, sticking of the base-level controlling unit; and inadequate camera mounts. This poster illustrates proposed solutions to these issues.

Monday, November 11, 2013

BYUI Undergraduate Research Conference Abstract: Principles of Equilibrium Demonstrated on a Stream Table

Abstract submitted for poster presentation at the BYU-Idaho Student Research Conference

Principles of Equilibrium Demonstrated on a Stream Table

Grant Coleman, Loren Wagner, and William W. Little (mentor)

Three fundamental factors control equilibrium in natural fluvial systems: discharge, load, and gradient.  A stream naturally modifies its gradient to barely transport sediment entering from tributaries and adjusts its cross-sectional area (width and depth) to barely contain bank full discharge.  Changes in any one of these factors affects behavior of the other two.  A stream in equilibrium develops a graded profile.  When equilibrium is disrupted, the stream generates a new graded profile that is either steeper or gentler than the previous as it returns to equilibrium.  For example, a drop in base level steepens gradient, increasing discharge velocity, leading to erosion.  This, in turn, flattens the gradient and decreases discharge velocity, until the stream is again barely able to transport the sediment provided to it.  Changes in the other factors affect the stream in a similar way.  Within a balance between these three factors, a migrating meandering channel can be created and sustained.  Using a stream table with variable base level, water discharge, and sediment feed capabilities, we have successfully tested and demonstrated these concepts.

Friday, November 8, 2013

BYUI Undergraduate Research Conference Abstract: Development of a sustainable migrating meander channel on a small-scale stream table




Abstract submitted for poster presentation at the BYU-Idaho Student Research Conference

Development of a sustainable migrating meander: Can a migrating and sustainable meandering stream channel be created on a small-scale stream table?

Brandon Rasaka, Cody MacCabe, Rachel McCullough, and William W. Little (mentor)

To date, generating an artificial sustainable and migrating meandering channel has been accomplished only on large-scale stream tables, such as that at the University of California - Berkley (>100 m²). However, using a new, smaller (~2 m²) table, designed by the BYU-Idaho Department of Geology and constructed in conjunction with the Department of Mechanical Engineering, that permits controlled changes in load type, load amount, discharge volume, and base level, we successfully accomplished this objective.
        
The challenge was finding a balance between cut bank erosion and point bar deposition, which, though conceptually simple, proved difficult to replicate in an artificial setting.  This was eventually accomplished by independently adjusting stream gradient, caliber and amount of load, flow velocity, discharge volume, base level, and cohesion of bank materials.  The key turned out to be using a mixture of sand and clay, both as the initial box-fill material and new sediment fed into the system. Clay in the box fill decreased the rate at which cut banks eroded.  Sand in the sediment feed allowed deposition of the initial point bar.  Clay in the sediment feed added cohesion to the point bar, decreasing likelihood of channel straightening through chute cutoff across the bar.

The final result was development of three meander bends that migrated both laterally and downstream, each with a well-defined cutback and well-developed point bar.

Thursday, November 7, 2013

EXPERIMENT 10

Hypothesis

Thoroughly mixing sand and kaolinite as the alluvial bed material will result in more cohesion than sand alone and less than sand covered by a thick layer of kaolinite and bentonite, potentially allowing adjustments to discharge and sediment load that will find a balance between cutbank erosion and point bar deposition.  



Set Up (Fig. 1)

Bed fill:
Fine-grained (0.70 mesh) quartz sand mixed with kaolinite.  Sand:clay = 3:1.
Bed thickness:
8 cm
Bed gradient:
~1⁰
Base level:
Even with channel mouth (11.5 cm)
Discharge rate:
Not recorded (Rates from previous experiments are not reliable.)
Sediment feed rate:
~0.67 mL/min
Shape of initial channel:
Same as Experiment 9
Depth of initial channel:
~1 cm
Width of initial channel:
~3.5 cm
Discharge stage:
Bankfull
Adjustments from Experiment 9:
· 3:1 ratio of sand and kaolinite mixed to make bed fill.
Procedure:
· Discharge and sediment feed were started and allowed to flow uninhibited for the duration of the experiment.

Figure 1: Initial setup with sand/clay mixture for bed fill and a bend near the head of the channel to facilitate initial meander development.




Observations


Experiment initiated 18 November 12:23.

1) 13:32: Sediment had filled the channel near the feed.  Discharge had broken through the head of the first bend, causing flooding and splay development. (Fig. 2).  The sediment feed rate was lowered to ~0.5 mL/min.




Figure 2: Sediment filled channel, flooding, and splay development.


20 November


2) 14:00: The sediment feed was stopped to encourage channel incision.


3) 11:25: The discharge was increased to bankfull and base level was lowered by 0.5 cm to encourage channel incision.


4) 11:45: The channel was artificially deepened to allow a higher discharge and greater sediment transport.


21 November


5) 07:50: The initial bend shows erosion with minor lateral migration.  A submerged point bar has developed on the inside of the bend (Fig. 3). Cutbank erosion and point bar deposition appear to be roughly equal.  The discharge level had dropped to about 1 cm below bankfull; therefore, discharge volume was increased to bring it back to bankfull.


Figure 3: Cutbank erosion and development of a point bar on the initial meander.  At bankfull stage, the point bar is submerged.




6) 12:10: Further erosion and migration of the cutbank.  Deposition on the point bar appears to be keeping pace.

7) 16:40: Two additional meanders have developed downstream from the initial bend (Fig. 4).


Figure 4: Enlargement of the first meander and development of two others.


8) 18:05: Discharge is maintained at bankfull and continues to flow over the tops of point bars. We discussed possibly varying discharge stage to make point bars alternate between being submerged and exposed but decided, for now, to maintain the flow at bankful.  Base level was lowered by about 0.5 cm to encourage channel incision.


22 November

9) 08:37: Little change from the last observation.


10) 10:38: Dropped base level another ~0.5 cm to encourage thalweg incision.


11) 11:47: Turned the sediment feed off to encourage thalweg incision.


12) 13:00: A chute channel had incised across the point bar at the initial bend (Fig. 5).



Figure 5: A small, straight chute channel incised across the initial point bar.






13) 14:00 Re-oriented the angle of the discharge hose to direct flow away from the point bar and enhance flow within the thalweg, rather than across the bar top.


14) 15:00 The thalweg has returned to the main channel and no longer cuts across the point bar.


15) 16:00: Re-started the sediment feed, using a mixture of 3 parts sand to 1 part kaolinite, matching the composition of the bed fill.  Before this, pure sand was fed onto the table.  The sediment feed rate is ~0.9 mL/min.


23 November


16) 17:20: Meanders have become better defined along their margins, but the channel is very shallow near head of the table at the discharge/sediment feed entry point (Fig. 6).


Figure 6: Each of the three meanders has migrated laterally and downstream.  Downstream migration is particularly evident in the middle meander.

17) Time not recorded: The first and second meanders have become increasingly well defined and continue to migrate.  Meander three has straightened and transformed to a deltaic distributary and is widening the channel mouth (Figs. 7a, b).  The sediment feed rate reduced to ~0.6 mL/min.




Figure 7a: Continued downstream and lateral migration of the first and second meanders. The third meander has transformed to a delta distributary.


Figure 7b: Continued migration of meanders.  Notice emergent point bars.














26 November


18) 10:15: Base level had dropped significantly, apparently because someone not related to the experiment tampered with the base level control. A new, relatively straight channel was incised through headward erosion from the basin toward the source (Figs. 8a, b). Base level was raised in an unsuccessful attempt to re-establish the meander pattern.  The experiment was terminated.



Figure 8a: The experiment was terminated prematurely due to unauthorized drop in base level, resulting in incision of a straight channel.




Figure 8b: Close up of Figure 8a.


Interpretations (Each interpretation is tied by number to an above observation.)

1) The sediment feed rate was too high to be transported by the discharge, leading to in-channel deposition, which blocked the channel, causing flooding and development of a splay.


2 - 4) Stopping the sediment feed, increasing discharge, lowering base-level, and, finally, artificially deepening the channel were done to create a through-flowing thalweg.


5) The adjustments recorded in Observations 2 through 4 seem to have been successful, and an apparent balance between erosion and  deposition was achieved, leading to cutbank migration and development of a small point bar associated with the initially-carved channel.


6 - 9) Enhancement of the relationship of Observation 5, with development of additional meanders that are migrating both laterally and downstream.  The current conditions seem to be achieving our objective.


10 - 11) The desired meandering channel is forming; however, we would like to produce a deeper, better-defined thalweg.  To try and achieve this, we dropped base level and ceased feeding sediment.


12 - 15) The adjustments recorded in Observations 10 through 11 led to headward erosion across the first point bar and development of a chute channel.  To correct this, we changed the orientation of the discharge hose to be parallel with the meander bend, rather than pointed toward the point bar.  This adjustment successfully caused the flow to reoccupy the channel thalweg and abandon the chute across the point bar surface.  Additionally, the sediment feed was restarted to re-establish deposition on the point bar.  In this case, rather than run pure quartz sand, as before, a three part sand to one part clay mixture, the same as that used in the alluvial bed, was fed to the table with the thought that the clay would diminish point bar erosion and incision.


16 - 17) The current balance between sediment character, sediment feed rate, discharge, and composition of bank/fill material appears to be close to creating the desired balance between cutbank erosion and point bar deposition.  A moderately-meandering pattern consisting of three bends resulted; however, because of deltaic deposition and consequent basinward extension of the channel, the third meander has transformed to a straighter distributary channel.


Technical Issue


Someone not in the class and not associated with the project lowered base level, resulting in steepening of the gradient, headward erosion, and development of a straight channel that cut from the basin across all three point bars to the head of the table.  Because of proximity to the close of the semester, it was decided to terminate the project, rather than try to re-establish the meandering pattern.  Had the experiment continued, we desired to try to develop a deeper, better defined thalweg and a tighter, more complex meandering pattern.

Wednesday, November 6, 2013

EXPERIMENT 9

Hypothesis

Adding a thick layer of clay (kaolinite and bentonite) across the entire alluvial surface will increase bank cohesion, slowing rates of cutbank erosion and allowing point bar deposition to keep pace.

Set Up

Bed fill:
Fine-grained (0.70 mesh) quartz sand overlain by thin layer of kaolinite, a layer of bentonite (~1 cm), and another thin layer of kaolinite
Bed thickness:
5 - 6 cm
Bed gradient:
0⁰
Base level:
Even with channel mouth
Discharge rate:
45 mL/s (estimated)
Sediment feed rate:
0 mL/s
Shape of initial channel:
Single semi-circular 45⁰ bend with a 10 cm radius, followed by a straight channel
Depth of initial channel:
~2 cm
Width of initial channel:
4 cm (estimated)
Discharge stage:
~1 cm below bankfull
Adjustments from Experiment 8:
· An ~0.5 cm thick bed of inter laminated Kaolinite and bentonite covering the entire alluvial bed surface.
· Base-level stability resolved by inserting 3/4" black water-line tubing into 1" similar tubing with a plastic handle running through the top.
Procedure:
· Discharge and sediment feed were started and allowed to flow uninhibited for the duration of the experiment.


Observations

Experiment initiated 1 Nov



1) 11:15: The bed surface had swollen, developing large mounds and cracks.  The initial channel was carved.  (Fig. 1).

2) 12:15: The channel had narrowed and portions of its banks had collapsed, restricting flow (Fig. 2).


Figure 1.  Mounds and cracks developed on alluvial bed surface.



Figure 2.  Channel constriction due to swelling and collapsing of clay.


2 November

3) 7:20: Sand had accumulated within the channel upstream from collapse structures.  The stream avulsed and flowed along the head of the table to a sidewall, where it then followed the sidewall to the basin (Fig. 3a, b). The channel was cleared of collapse structures and sand, and the avulsion crevasse was plugged, allowing reoccupation of the carved channel. Base level was raised ~0.5 cm.

Figure 3a.  Initial channel filled with sand near the table head and point of avulsion.


Figure 3b.  Initial and avulsed channel paths.



5 November

4) 14:00: A meander had developed just downstream from the initial, artificially carved bend (Fig. 4).  Banks continued to collapse and restrict stream flow (Fig. 5).  Collapsed blocks were removed artificially with each inspection of the table.  This would cause a drop in discharge level upstream of the prior obstruction, increasing flow velocity and allowing transport of sand the entire length of the table.


6 November

5) 14:00: A weakly meandering thalweg had developed (Fig. 6).

Experiment terminated 8 Nov

6) Little additional change, other than continuing slow collapse along banks.


Figure 4: Development of a cutback due to removal of sand and undercutting of the clay layer.
Figure 5: Collapsed bentonite blocks.


Figure 6: Over a period of several days a weak meandering pattern developed.



Interpretations (Each interpretation is tied by number to an above observation.)

1) Permeation of "ground" water into the alluvial bed led to expansion of the bentonite layer, developing the mounded topography.

2) Swelling of the bentonite layer caused channel narrowing.  Steepness of the channel banks resulted in mass wasting.

3) Clay blocks that collapsed into the channel restricted the flow, causing the upper channel to fill with sand.  Because the stream could no longer follow the initial channel, it flowed over its bank and moved along the table walls to the basin.  The initial channel was reactivated artificially by removing blockages and plugging the avulsion point.

4) Keeping the channel clear of bentonite blocks allowed the discharge to flow more rapidly.  As the flow crossed the channel from the carved bend, it removed sand, undercutting the clay layer and leading to collapse and formation of a cutbank.


5) The process described under Interpretation 4 continued, along with deposition of sand on point bars, producing a weak meandering pattern.


6) Had we allowed the experiment to continue, a more pronounced meandering pattern probably would have developed, though, as the clay became stripped from the surface, ultimately a braided channel similar to previous results is likely.


Technical Issues


No new technical problems.  New base-level control appears to function well, as do temporary "fixes" to the discharge and sediment feed mechanisms.